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Supreme Court Summer Institute for Teachers. U.S. District Court – 94 districts Federal Trials FEDERAL: 1 million cases/yr STATES: 30 million cases/yr.

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Presentation on theme: "Supreme Court Summer Institute for Teachers. U.S. District Court – 94 districts Federal Trials FEDERAL: 1 million cases/yr STATES: 30 million cases/yr."— Presentation transcript:

1 Supreme Court Summer Institute for Teachers

2 U.S. District Court – 94 districts Federal Trials FEDERAL: 1 million cases/yr STATES: 30 million cases/yr Trial Courts – municipal or county Local Trials State Supreme Court – highest state court Intermediate Appeals Court U.S. Supreme Court? Original Jurisdiction ~80% of cases accepted come from federal system <1% of cases accepted are original jurisdiction ~ 80 Decisions U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals: 12 circuits + Federal Circuit How do cases get to the

3 Fed. DC

4 How many cert petitions are considered? In recent terms, there have been between 7,000 and 9,000 cases appealed to the Supreme Court each year Out of approx. 8,000 petitions in the average year, about 80 are granted (1%) Paid Petitions Petitions that pay the $300 filing fee In forma pauperis litigants who can’t pay the filing fee (often prisoners) ~20% of petitions~80% of petitions 3-4% granted0.2% granted Make up 85-90% of docket Make up 10-15% of docket

5 Cert: The Justices’ Role With 8,000 petitions per year: If a Justice spent 40 hours per week, 50 weeks per year ONLY reading cert petitions, they would be able to allocate approximately 15 minutes to each petition (which may include the petition itself, the brief in opposition, a reply brief, and amicus briefs). The Justices cannot possibly read all the cert petitions. They just don’t have the time.

6 Cert Pool IN the poolNOT in the pool Roberts Scalia Kennedy Sotomayor Thomas Ginsburg Breyer Kagan Alito = 4 clerks x 8 justices = 32 law clerks read 8,000 petitions Each clerk reads and writes a memo on 250 petitions/yr 4 clerks x 1 justice = 4 law clerks read 8,000 petitions Each clerk reads 2,000 petitions/yr =

7 Advantages of the Pool Saves time Someone is more thoroughly going over each petition Clerks from other chambers can mark up pool memos and give to their justice

8 Disadvantages of the Pool Reduces independence if eight of the nine justices are in the pool and they’re relying on one writer for each memo The pool gives clerks - generally one year out of law school and only at the Court for one year - too much responsibility for setting the Court’s agenda

9 “Discuss List” The Chief Justice generates a discuss list, based on memos prepared by clerks. Other justices may add to the list. All cases generated by Solicitor General (head Supreme Court lawyer for federal government) are automatically discussed All Capital Cases discussed (no such thing as a “frivolous case” here)

10 The Rule of Four If four justices vote to grant cert, it is granted Designed to prevent tyranny of the majority If a case does not gain four votes, a justice may write a “dissent from denial,” but this is extremely rare All votes are secret

11 More “cert-worthy” criteria Conflict in lower courts Important Multiple amicus briefs at cert stage Affects large number of people Unique/one of a kind case this Court must decide

12 More reasons to deny than to grant! A better case “in the pipeline” The issue hasn’t “percolated” enough A petition that raises too many questions (prefer focusing on one issue) Bad vehicle for reaching this legal issue Case is deemed “frivolous”

13 Petitions filed by individuals tend to be heard less Ranking tends to be: #1 - U.S. government #2 - Corporations #3 - States #4 - Organized groups #5 - Individuals


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